Tag Archives: mourn

‘Designated Survivor’ & ‘Cleaning Lady’ Co-Stars Mourn Adan Canto: Kiefer Sutherland “Heartbroken” & Maggie Q Shares Tribute To Her “Beautiful Friend” – Deadline

  1. ‘Designated Survivor’ & ‘Cleaning Lady’ Co-Stars Mourn Adan Canto: Kiefer Sutherland “Heartbroken” & Maggie Q Shares Tribute To Her “Beautiful Friend” Deadline
  2. Adan Canto, actor known for ‘The Cleaning Lady’ and ‘Designated Survivor,’ dies at 42 CNN
  3. Adan Canto Dies: ‘Heartbroken’ Kiefer Sutherland Remembers Late Designated Survivor Co-Star TVLine
  4. Adan Canto’s Wife: Get to Know Stephanie Canto & Their Family HollywoodLife
  5. Adan Canto, ‘The Cleaning Lady’ and ‘Narcos’ actor, dies at 42 KTLA 5

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‘Designated Survivor’ & ‘Cleaning Lady’ Co-Stars Mourn Adan Canto: Kiefer Sutherland “Heartbroken” & Maggie Q Shares Tribute To Her “Beautiful Friend” – Deadline

  1. ‘Designated Survivor’ & ‘Cleaning Lady’ Co-Stars Mourn Adan Canto: Kiefer Sutherland “Heartbroken” & Maggie Q Shares Tribute To Her “Beautiful Friend” Deadline
  2. Adan Canto, X-Men Star, Dead at 42 Entertainment Tonight
  3. Adan Canto’s Wife: Get to Know Stephanie Canto & Their Family HollywoodLife
  4. Halle Berry Mourns Late X-Men Costar Adan Canto After His Death at 42: ‘Forever, Forever in My Heart’ PEOPLE
  5. Adan Canto Dies: ‘Heartbroken’ Kiefer Sutherland Remembers Late Designated Survivor Co-Star TVLine

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Metro Detroit Arab, Jewish communities mourn, rally amid violence in Middle East – Detroit Free Press

  1. Metro Detroit Arab, Jewish communities mourn, rally amid violence in Middle East Detroit Free Press
  2. ‘We’re just doing everything we can to stay safe’: Md. families caught in the conflict in Israel WTOP
  3. ‘This is different’: DMV professors weigh in on Israel-Hamas war; 14 Americans killed WJLA
  4. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer joins thousands in rally for Israel in Southfield Detroit Free Press
  5. Safety concerns loom over metro Detroit Jewish, Palestinian communities in wake Middle East conflict WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Faithful mourn Benedict XVI at funeral presided over by pope

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis joined tens of thousands of faithful in bidding farewell to Benedict XVI at a rare requiem Mass Thursday for a dead pope presided over by a living one, ending an unprecedented decade for the Catholic Church that was triggered by the German theologian’s decision to retire.

Bells tolled and the crowd applauded as pallbearers emerged from a fog-shrouded St. Peter’s Basilica and placed Benedict’s simple cypress coffin before the altar in the square outside. Wearing the crimson vestments typical of papal funerals, Francis opened the service with a prayer and closed it by solemnly blessing the casket and bowing his head.

In between, Francis made only fleeting reference to Benedict in his homily, offering a meditation on Christ instead of a eulogy of his predecessor’s legacy before the casket was sealed and entombed in the basilica grotto.

Heads of state and royalty, clergy from around the world and thousands of regular people flocked to the ceremony, despite Benedict’s request for simplicity and official efforts to keep the first funeral for a pope emeritus in modern times low-key.

Many mourners hailed from Benedict’s native Bavaria and donned traditional dress, including boiled wool coats to guard against the morning chill.

“We came to pay homage to Benedict and wanted to be here today to say goodbye,” said Raymond Mainar, who traveled from a small village east of Munich for the funeral. “He was a very good pope.”

Ignoring exhortations for decorum at the end, some in the crowd held banners or shouted “Santo Subito!” — “Sainthood Now!” — echoing the spontaneous chants that erupted during St. John Paul II’s 2005 funeral.

The former Joseph Ratzinger, who died Dec. 31 at age 95, is considered one of the 20th century’s greatest theologians and spent his lifetime upholding church doctrine. But he will go down in history for a singular, revolutionary act that changed the future of the papacy: He retired, the first pope in six centuries to do so.

Francis has praised Benedict’s courage in stepping aside, saying it “opened the door” for other popes to do the same. But few, including Benedict himself, expected his 10-year retirement to last longer than his eight-year papacy, and the prolonged cohabitation of two popes in the Vatican Gardens sparked calls for protocols to guide future resignations.

Some 50,000 people attended Thursday’s Mass, according to the Vatican, after around 200,000 paid their respects during three days of public viewing.

Only Italy and Germany were invited to send official delegations, but other leaders took the Vatican up on its offer and came in their “private capacity.” They included several heads of state and government, delegations of royal representatives, a host of patriarchs and 125 cardinals.

Among those attending was Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen, who was given special court permission to attend the funeral. Zen was detained in May on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces under China’s national security law after he fell afoul of authorities over his participation in a now-silenced democracy movement. His passport was revoked when he was detained.

Benedict’s close confidants were also in attendance, most prominently the former pope’s longtime secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein. He bent down and kissed a book of the Gospels that was left open on the coffin before the ceremony began.

After it ended, the coffin was brought to the basilica grotto, placed first into a zinc casket, sealed, then placed into an oak one.

A choir’s hymn echoed in the crypt as the casket was lowered into the ground, featuring Benedict’s papal coat of arms, a cross and a plaque noting in Latin that it contained his body: “Corpus Benedicti XVI PM,” for “pontifex maximus” or “supreme pontiff.”

Matteo Colonna, a 20-year-old seminarian from Teramo, Italy, said he came to Rome in part because of the historic nature of the funeral — but also because it had personal resonance for him.

“The first spark of my vocation started under the pontificate of Benedict, but then it became even stronger under Pope Francis,” Colonna said, while sitting in prayer in St. Peter’s Square at dawn. “I see a continuity between these two popes and the fact that today Francis is celebrating the funeral in Benedict’s memory is an historical event.”

But the service was also significant for what it lacked: the feeling of uncertainty that would normally accompany the passing of a pope before a new one is elected.

“Benedict has been the bridge between John Paul and Francis,” said Alessandra Aprea, a 56-year-old from Meta di Sorrento near Naples. “We could not have Francis without him.”

Early Thursday the Vatican released the official history of Benedict’s life, a short document in Latin that was placed in a metal cylinder in his coffin before it was sealed, along with the coins and medallions minted during his papacy and his pallium stoles.

The document gave ample attention to Benedict’s historic resignation and referred to him as “pope emeritus,” citing verbatim the Latin words he uttered on Feb. 11, 2013, when he announced he would retire.

The document, known as a “rogito” or deed, also cited his theological and papal legacy, including his outreach to Anglicans and Jews and his efforts to combat clergy sexual abuse “continually calling the church to conversion, prayer, penance and purification.”

Francis didn’t mention Benedict’s legacy in his homily and only uttered his name once, in the final line, delivering instead a meditation on Jesus’ willingness to entrust himself to God’s will.

“Holding fast to the Lord’s last words and to the witness of his entire life, we too, as an ecclesial community, want to follow in his steps and to commend our brother into the hands of the Father,” Francis said.

During St. John Paul II’s quarter-century as pope, Ratzinger spearheaded a crackdown on dissent as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, taking action against the left-leaning liberation theology that spread in Latin America in the 1970s and against dissenting theologians and nuns who didn’t toe the Vatican’s hard line on matters like sexual morals.

His legacy was marred by the clergy sexual abuse crisis, even though he recognized earlier than most the “filth” of priests who raped children, and actually laid the groundwork for the Holy See to punish them.

As cardinal and pope, he passed sweeping church legislation that resulted in 848 priests being defrocked from 2004 to 2014, roughly his pontificate with a year on either end. But abuse survivors still held him responsible, for failing to sanction any bishop who moved abusers around, refusing to mandate the reporting of sex crimes to police and identifying him as embodying the clerical system that long protected the institution over victims.

Mike McDonnell of the U.S. abuse survivor group SNAP said while Benedict passed new canon laws, he could have done far more to influence John Paul to take firm action. Referring to Benedict’s nickname as “God’s Rottweiler,” he said: “In our in our view, it was a dog bark without a bite. Certainly he could have done more.”

A group representing German clergy abuse survivors called on German officials attending Benedict’s funeral to demand more action from the Vatican on sexual abuse. Eckiger Tisch asked leaders to demand that Francis issue a “universal church law” stipulating zero tolerance in dealing with abuse by clergy.

The funeral ritual itself is modeled on the code used for dead popes but with some modifications given Benedict was not a reigning pontiff when he died.

While Thursday’s Mass was unusual, it does have some precedent: In 1802, Pope Pius VII presided over the funeral in St. Peter’s of his predecessor, Pius VI, who had died in exile in France in 1799 as a prisoner of Napoleon.

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Associated Press journalist Trisha Thomas contributed.

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Follow AP’s coverage of Pope Benedict XVI at https://apnews.com/hub/pope-benedict-xvi

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Mahsa Amini: Clashes break out as people mourn teen’s death



CNN
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Clashes broke out throughout Iran Wednesday as thousands of people came to the burial site of Mahsa Amini in Saqqez, a city in the Kurdistan province, to mark 40 days since her death, semi-official Iranian state news agency ISNA said.

Protests have swept through the Islamic Republic following the death of the 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman, who died on September 16 after being detained by “morality police” and taken to a “re-education center,” allegedly for not abiding by the country’s conservative dress code.

Nationwide protests took place in Iran on Wednesday to mark 40 days since Amini died, an important day of mourning in Iranian and Islamic tradition.

The unrest came on the same day that at least 15 people were killed and 10 others were injured in a “terrorist attack” at the Shahcheragh Shrine in the city of Shiraz, southern Iran, according to state-run IRNA news. It’s unclear if Wednesday’s attack was linked to the protests.

ISNA said security forces “did not prevent” protesters from visiting Amini’s grave in Saqqez, which is also her birthplace, but reported that clashes took place after people left the site.

“There were no clashes between mourners and police at the burial site, most were chanting Kurdish slogans, some moved towards the city with the intention of clashes, one of them raised the Kurdish flag,” ISNA said.

In videos shared on social media, large crowds of people and lines of cars are seen making their way to Saqqez’s Aichi cemetery where Amini is buried. Groups of people in the videos are heard chanting “women, life, freedom” and “death to this child-killing regime.”

Other videos show plumes of smoke rising from several fires in the streets of a different neighborhood nearby. Gunshots are heard in the background while protesters march in the streets.

Video shared by Kurdish rights group Hengaw and verified by CNN shows security forces deployed in large numbers in Saqqez late Tuesday, after activists called for protests across the country to mark 40 days since Amini died.

Internet watchdog Netblocks said on Twitter there was a near-total disruption to the internet reported in Iran’s Kurdistan Province and Sanandaj from Wednesday morning. State news ISNA reported that following “outbreaks and scattered clashes” the internet in “Saqqez city was cut off due to security considerations.”

There is no law in Iran that says the government cannot ban religious ceremonies if the state believes there are security concerns.

The government has in the past banned and attacked religious ceremonies claiming safety reasons and have in other cases reached out to families to ask them to refrain from holding public mourning ceremonies.

Iranian state media IRNA said Amini’s family made a statement to say they will not be marking her passing on Wednesday.

Kurdish rights group Hengaw said the Amini family was “under a lot of pressure” from security forces to write that statement, adding they had threatened to arrest Amini’s brother if the procession took place.

Large protests broke out in Tehran on Wednesday, where security forces fired teargas at demonstrators mourning Amini’s death.

Video posted to social media showed demonstrators burning trash cans and throwing rocks. Security forces could be seen firing pellet guns in return.

A group of protesters in Tehran reported to be doctors and dentists were seen chanting “freedom, freedom, freedom!,” according to another video posted on social media. Another separate video shows teargas being fired in their direction.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps [IRGC] anti-riot units were seen marching in Tehran as the protests intensified on Wednesday, according to video posted on social media.

Similar units were firing on a group of doctors protesting in Tehran earlier in the day forcing the crowd to scatter, according to the person taking the video. It’s unclear what was being fired in the video.

Protests have also occurred at universities across the country including the University of Ferdowsi in Mashhad; Azad University in Karaj; Tehran’s Islamic Azad University Science and Research Branch; and Azad University – Kerman.

IRNA reported on Wednesday that the Sharif University of Technology in Tehran has announced that classes of new students will “continue to be held virtually until further notice” due to the “persistence of some problems and the lack of a calm environment.”

As the protests rage, international leaders have been condemning the repression of peaceful protesters by Iranian forces. The United States imposed a slew of new sanctions against Iranian officials involved in the ongoing crackdown on Wednesday.

Those targeted by sanctions include the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ intelligence organization and the IRGC’s deputy commander for operations, as well as two officials in the Sistan and Baluchistan province, “site of some of the worst violence in the latest round of protests,” the Treasury Department said in statement.

White House officials say that the United States fears Russia may be advising Iran on how to crack down on public protests, as clashes have broken out in Iran to mark 40 days since the death of Mahsa Amini.

“We are concerned that Moscow may be advising Tehran on best practices, drawing on Russia’s extensive experience of suppressing open demonstrations,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during Wednesday’s briefing. “The evidence that Iran is helping Russia wage its war against Ukraine is clear and it is public. And Iran and Russia are growing closer the more isolated they become. Our message to Iran is very, very clear – stop killing your people and stop sending weapons to Russia to help kill Ukrainians.”

United Nations experts called for an independent international investigation into the crackdown.

The experts noted in a Wednesday statement that an “alarming number of protesters have already been detained and killed, many of whom are children, women and older persons,” as they called on the government to tell the police to cease the use of excessive and lethal force.

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Red Dead Online Players Mourn Its Death Via Virtual Funerals

Screenshot: Rockstar Games

Red Dead Online’s last major update was released exactly a year ago today, and since then the game has lingered like a zombie as the community gradually lost hope that more content was coming. Before the anniversary, some players began planning an online funeral for Red Dead Online. And then last week, Rockstar Games officially confirmed that the game was (basically) dead. Luckily, fans had already planned the funeral.

The last big update for Red Dead Online, Blood Money, was released on July 13, 2021. The update wasn’t a fan favorite, but it did add new crimes and large-scale robberies to the game, which helped give more criminally-inclined players some new things to do. It also seemed to mark a return to a more regular update schedule for the game, as it was released just seven months after the last major update, which itself was released about five months earlier. But now, a year later, it’s clear Blood Money wasn’t the start of a new era for the game, but the end of it.

Following a few weeks of online planning and viral social media posts, players have jumped back into Red Dead Online to say goodbye to what could have been. Many are visiting the graveyards and cemeteries dotted around the large map, taking photos, having a drink or two, and meeting up with other players to mourn.

“Today is the day the community is paying its respects to a game that many of us love, and wish had gotten more love from Rockstar,” said RDO player Dirty Tyler on Twitter. “So login today, and have a few beers at either Valentine or Blackwater Graveyard.”

Others shared similar messages, often with photos or videos of themselves saying goodbye near a tombstone. I’ve also spotted online funeral marches towards various locations and players sharing a drink in real life with their online avatars.

“What a great community, what a great game, what a great time,” tweeted SubjectᐰZeta

The tone of these posts and meet-ups is even less hopeful than I originally expected thanks to Rockstar putting the final nail in the game’s coffin last week when it confirmed, after months and months of player frustration, that it had moved resources to GTA 6 and had no more major updates planned for RDO. As mentioned earlier, today’s digital funeral was already in the works, but now, it seems sadly perfect. A rare instance of Rockstar and RDO players agreeing.

While Red Dead Redemption II’s online mode never grew to be as popular as its Grand Theft Auto Online counterpart, it had a dedicated and passionate player base who would spend hours and hours in the game’s highly detailed open world map, hunting animals, taking on bounties, and riding horses across fields and swamps. It was a slower game compared to GTA Online, but for many, this was preferred. Folks would often create characters with backstories and roleplay in RDO’s digital world, and it often felt like this was all part of Rockstar’s design, perhaps an example of the publisher taking notice of all the GTA Online roleplaying that happens on Twitch.

Sure, the game will still technically be around and will remain playable and online for the foreseeable future. It will also still get occasional tiny updates to combat exploits or update in-game stores. But it will likely never get any new player roles, bounty hunter missions, season passes, weapons, or horses. For an online game in 2022, that makes it as good as dead in most players’ eyes.

As for what’s next for Rockstar, the future is filled with Grand Theft Auto. The publisher confirmed it had more updates coming for GTA Online, including some long-awaited features like the ability to complete sell missions in private lobbies. It also confirmed it continues to develop the next game in the GTA series, likely to be Grand Theft Auto 6. 

And while many millions of players will be excited to play the next GTA, it’s also likely some Red Dead players will see it not as the next big Rockstar title, but as the game that killed their beloved RDO.

 



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Japanese mourn ex-PM Shinzo Abe a day after his assassination

NARA, Japan, July 9 (Reuters) – A steady stream of mourners on Saturday visited the scene of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s assassination in the western city of Nara, an unusual act of political violence that has shocked the nation.

Japan’s longest serving modern leader was gunned down while making a campaign speech on Friday morning by a 41-year-old man, in a deed decried by the political establishment as an attack on democracy itself. read more

On the final day of campaigning before Sunday’s parliamentary election, a metal detector was set up at the site of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s stump speech in a city southwest of Tokyo, an unusual security measure in Japan, along with increased police presence.

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“I’m just shocked that this kind of thing happened in Nara,” Natsumi Niwa, a 50-year-old housewife, said after offering flowers with her 10-year-old son near the scene of the killing at a downtown train station.

Abe, a conservative and architect of the “Abenomics” policies aimed at reflating the Japanese economy, inspired the name of her son, Masakuni, with his rallying cry of Japan as a “beautiful nation”, Niwa said. “Kuni” means nation in Japanese.

Over 100 people were queuing to lay flowers at midday at a table featuring a photo of Abe giving a speech, with more arriving. Local officials were moving some of the offerings to create space.

A night vigil will be held on Monday, with Abe’s funeral to take place on Tuesday, attended by close friends, Japanese media said. There was no immediate word on any public memorial service.

Police are scrambling to establish details of the motive and method of Abe’s killer.

Tetsuya Yamagami, tackled and arrested immediately after the attack, told police he believed Abe was linked to a religious group he blamed for ruining his mother financially and breaking up the family, local media reported, citing police sources. Police have not identified the group.

MOTORCADE ARRIVES IN TOKYO

Campaigning resumed on the final day of electioneering before polling for the upper house of parliament, which is expected to deliver victory to the ruling coalition led by Kishida, an Abe protege.

Kishida was back on the campaign trail visiting regional constituencies after making an emergency return to Tokyo on Friday in the wake of the shooting.

Abe’s killing “heightens the prospect for stronger turnout and greater support for his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)”, Eurasia Group analysts including David Boling wrote in a note.

The LDP, where Abe retained considerable influence, had already been expected to gain seats before the assassination. The lawmaker, 67, served twice as prime minister, stepping down citing ill health on both occasions.

“His health was improving so I was hoping he would have a third term,” said 49-year-old Tatsuya Futami in Nara. “He was still young as a politician – it’s a great shame.”

Abe’s death has raised questions about security for public figures in Japan, where politicians commonly make direct appeals to voters outside train stations and supermarkets during campaigning season.

A strong election performance “could catalyse Kishida to push for Abe’s unfulfilled goal of amending Japan’s constitution to allow for a stronger role for the military,” James Brady, vice president at advisory firm Teneo, wrote in a note.

Abe, scion of a political family who became Japan’s youngest postwar premier, was rushed to a Nara hospital following the shooting. He did not regain consciousness and was pronounced dead five and a half hours after the late-morning attack.

A motorcade thought to be carrying the body of the slain politician arrived at his Tokyo residence after leaving the Nara hospital early on Saturday. Kishida visited the residence, Kyodo reported.

Kishida spoke on Saturday with U.S President Joe Biden, who expressed his condolences and praised Abe’s leadership, NHK reported.

Abe was key in the creation of the Quad grouping aimed at countering China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region. The other members, the United States, India and Australia, expressed shock at the assassination in a joint statement.

“We will honour Prime Minister Abe’s memory by redoubling our work towards a peaceful and prosperous region,” the statement said.

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Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama and Tim Kelly in Nara and the Tokyo newsroom; Editing by Sandra Maler and William Mallard

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Day to Mourn Uvalde Victims Amerie Jo Garza and Maite Rodriguez Upended by Fury at Cops

UVALDE, Texas—On a day meant to remember two of those killed in the massacre that took place last week here, the overall feeling was anger.

Many in the community are finding it hard to properly grieve the 21 lives lost when there seems to be so much injustice and an overall lack of trust in those who were sworn to protect and serve.

“Mistakes were made and we have no promise that they will never happen again,” said Peter Vasquez, a friend of 10-year-old victim Maite Rodriguez. “They brag about all of this training and all of this equipment and how they are prepared. All of that turned out to be lies.”

Maite Rodriguez will be laid to rest on Tuesday after a visitation was held Monday. A rosary Mass was set to take place on Monday evening for Amerie Jo Garza. As the memorials start to take place, the sorrow continues and so does the anger.

“They had to borrow equipment,” said Uvalde resident Miguel Flores. “In 2018 the police department claimed to have gotten grant money to buy equipment for this very thing. Where was this equipment last week when our children needed it?”

Flores was referring to a Facebook post that the Uvalde Police Department made back on Aug. 1, 2018, claiming that it had been awarded a grant from Gov. Greg Abbott that provided every single officer in the department with Level 4 body armor.

Back in 2017 during the legislative session, Texas taxpayers were asked to foot the bill for a $23 million grant program that sent 453 police jurisdictions around the state the money to buy Level 4 body armor that could have (and should have) been used during a situation like the one that occurred in Uvalde last Tuesday. A spokesperson for the state said that most of that money came from the state’s general fund—but either way, some locals are now wondering whether that money was wasted here.

“I guess you can’t buy bravery,” said Javier Cazares, 43, whose daughter, Jacklyn, was killed in the shooting along with her cousins. “I mean I was there right outside and we heard the shooting. We were ready to go inside and the police just waited.”

Waiting was not what these parents and this community expected.

“We are told over and over again that these guys will be there for us when we need them,” said Martin Gonzalez. “Where in the hell were they?”

Gonzalez said he wanted to go and pay his respects to young Maite Rodriguez on Monday night but that his anger just wouldn’t let him.

“I can’t go in there and mourn and grieve with my friends when I know that I have all of this anger in my heart,” he said. “These people who blindly trust these officials need to open their eyes.”

Uvalde is not far from the Texas-Mexico border, where Abbott and fellow hardline Republicans have launched their own border security initiative known as “Operation Lone Star,” under which they use state law enforcement and National Guard to deter undocumented migrants from crossing the border. The narrative is that federal forces are weak, frail, and unable to protect the citizens of the state and country. The governor has repeatedly noted how the federal government has failed. In the end, it was those federal agents that helped end the massacre that took the lives of 21 people, including 19 children—while local and state law enforcement waited and wondered about what to do.

“Thank God Border Patrol was here,” said Gonzalez. “If they had not come in and taken control, then more people may have died.”

Sounds of crying filled the streets of Uvalde on Monday afternoon as the community struggled to process its grief. Locals’ hearts are full of pain, some of it inflicted by those they thought could be trusted.

“We never had this kind of mistrust and confusion until they started making Border Patrol out to be monsters,” said Gonzalez. “They are using us as pawns in their political game to get re-elected.”

Angelica Morales sat under the shade of a large oak tree on Monday trying to find peace amid all the tragedy.

“I can’t help but feel like if we had been a mostly white suburban community that things would have been different,” she said. “We are poor Hispanic families out here, and that is what makes us very different than the others.”

She said Hispanics have always been seen as the overlooked minority in places like Texas. She added that she didn’t want to make the situation about race and ethnicity but that in her mind it is hard not to think about it.

“I look at how we compare with Sandy Hook, Parkland, Columbine, and the others,” she said, referring to previous sites of school shootings. “The real main difference is our skin color and ethnicity.”

Morales said she is concerned that things are getting worse.

“Many of the officers that responded were Hispanic,” she said. “This is like what would happen back in Mexico. The so-called ‘good guys’ would wait until the bad guys were finished and then they would rush in like heroes. But really they waited because they were scared.”

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Families mourn, worry in wake of elementary school shooting

UVALDE, Texas (AP) — Distraught families gathered at a local civic center and turned to social media to mourn and to make desperate pleas for help finding missing children as the death toll in a gruesome school shooting at a Texas elementary school rose to at least 19 students. Authorities said the gunman also killed two adults.

By nightfall, names of those killed during Tuesday’s attack at Robb Elementary School in the town of Uvalde began to emerge. One man at the civic center walked away sobbing into his phone “she is gone.” On the backside of the building, a woman stood by herself, alternately crying and yelling into her phone, shaking her fist and stamping her feet.

Manny Renfro said he got word Tuesday that his grandson, 8-year-old Uziyah Garcia, was among those killed.

“The sweetest little boy that I’ve ever known,” Renfro said. “I’m not just saying that because he was my grandkid.”

Renfro said Uziyah last visited him in San Angelo during spring break.

“We started throwing the football together and I was teaching him pass patterns. Such a fast little boy and he could catch a ball so good,” Renfro said. “There were certain plays that I would call that he would remember and he would do it exactly like we practiced.”

Fourth-grade teacher Eva Mireles, 44, was remembered as a loving mother and wife.

“She was adventurous. I would definitely say those wonderful things about her. She is definitely going to be very missed,” said 34-year-old relative Amber Ybarra, of San Antonio.

Ybarra prepared to give blood for the wounded and pondered how no one noticed trouble with the shooter in time to stop him.

“To me, it’s more about raising mental health awareness,” said Ybarra, a wellness coach who attended the elementary school where the shooting happened. “Someone could possibly have seen a dramatic change before something like this happened.”

Lisa Garza, 54, of Arlington, Texas, mourned the death of her cousin, Xavier Javier Lopez, who had been eagerly awaiting a summer of swimming.

“He was just a loving 10-year-old little boy, just enjoying life, not knowing that this tragedy was going to happen today,” she said. “He was very bubbly, loved to dance with his brothers, his mom. This has just taken a toll on all of us.”

She also lamented what she described as lax gun laws.

“We should have more restrictions, especially if these kids are not in their right state of mind and all they want to do is just hurt people, especially innocent children going to the schools,” Garza said.

On social media, pictures of smiling children were posted, their families begging for information. Classes had been winding down for the year and each school day had a theme. Tuesday’s was Footloose and Fancy. Students were supposed to wear a nice outfit with fun or fancy shoes.

Adolfo Cruz, a 69-year-old air conditioning repairman, remained outside the school Tuesday night, waiting for word about his 10-year-old great-granddaughter, Eliajha Cruz Torres, whose whereabouts remained unknown to family.

Cruz drove to the scene after receiving a tearful and terrifying call from his daughter shortly after the first reports that an 18-year-old gunman had opened fire at the school. While he waited outside the school Tuesday night, his family was at the hospital and civic center waiting for any potential word on her condition.

Çruz called the waiting the heaviest moment of his life.

“I hope she is alive,” Cruz said. “They are waiting for an update.”

Federico Torres waited for news about his 10-year-old son Rogelio. He told KHOU-TV that he was at work when he learned about the shooting and rushed to the school.

“They sent us to the hospital, to the civic center, to the hospital and here again, nothing, not even in San Antonio,” Torres said. “They don’t tell us anything, only a photo, wait, hope that everything is well.”

Torres said he was praying that “my son is found safe … Please if you know anything, let us know.”

Hillcrest Memorial Funeral Home, which is located across the street from Robb Elementary School, said in a Facebook post on Tuesday evening that it would be assisting families of the shooting victims with no cost for funerals.

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Hollingsworth reported from Mission, Kansas. Jamie Stengle contributed from Dallas.

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Scientists unravel the mystery of how elephants mourn their dead thanks to YouTube, report says

Family of Indian elephants in the wild.Getty Images

  • A team of scientists used YouTube videos to observe how elephants mourn their dead, according to a new paper.

  • They found 39 videos capturing 24 cases of elephants mourning lost members of their herd, the study said.

  • The scientists were surprised to see female elephants carrying dead calves for days or weeks at a time.

Biologist Sanjeeta Sharma Pokharel had only observed one example of Asian elephants mourning their dead in the wild after four years of fieldwork in India, according to Science.org — the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s journal.

Some of her colleagues, who had spent decades observing wild elephants, only witnessed the creatures displaying grief a “handful of times,” the journal said.

Struggling to capture first-hand footage for their research, a team of scientists from the Indian Institute of Science’s Centre for Ecological Sciences tried something new; they turned to YouTube.

By searching terms like “Asian elephant death” and “elephant response to death,” Science.org said the team was able to find a wealth of new data.

They found 39 videos capturing 24 cases of elephants mourning their dead, per a paper published Wednesday in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

In the videos, the team of researchers observed mourning behaviors in the elephants.

According to The New York Times, they saw elephants sniffing and touching carcasses with their trunks, shaking the dead with their legs, and kicking dying calves in an apparent attempt to revive them.

The elephants also trumpeted and roared in response to the deaths, The New York Times reported, and held a vigil for lost members of their herd by staying near the bodies and chasing away curious humans.

In one case, a calf snuggled with its dying mother, and, in another example, adult elephants used their trunks to gently pat their friends on the head, per Science.org.

Most surprising, Pokharel told the newspaper, was observing adult female elephants carrying the bodies of dead calves. It was observed in five cases, the New York Times reported.

The female elephants, presumably mothers, could be seen carrying the babies through forests for days, possibly weeks, at a time, according to Science.org.

The work is part of a growing field called comparative thanatology — the scientific study of death and dying.

The method of crowdsourcing videos, per science, is sometimes called iEcology. It involves making use of online resources to generate ecological insights.

The research into how elephants mourn will be helpful, Pokharel told The New York Times, because it cold “give us insight about their highly complex cognitive abilities.”

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